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Monday, 20 May 2013
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OB Mtg Reveals 14% Tax Hike, Sparks Debate PDF Print E-mail
Written by Timothy Bolger   
Sunday, 19 May 2013 19:00

Ocean Beach officials, businesses and residents mostly appear to be meeting their goal of returning the village to relative normalcy in time for crowds to return Memorial Day weekend, but the road to recovery from Sandy remains as bumpy a ride as the superstorm's visit.

The village board approved a 13.7 percent tax hike to fund reconstruction efforts not covered by insurance or grants. Officials sparked controversy when they voted themselves a raise in the process. And several local landmarks--the ferry terminal, police station, Windswept and the lifeguard shack among them-will be works in progress this season.

"These are temporary buildings, but it gets us back working again," Ocean Beach Mayor James Mallot said of the structures replacing the freight storage, bathrooms and police station at the ferry dock. "I can't build the Taj Majal here for everybody in six months," he said. "This is a job that is going to be going on for a long time."

"Just make the front look pretty," one resident told the board.

On the plus side, village hall and the community house are back in operation-meaning the June 22 meeting will be the first back on the island since Sandy--and the new Fire Island Immediate Care Center, run by North Shore Long Island Jewish Health Systems, is replacing the cash-only village doctor's office on Bayberry Walk with a walk-in clinic that accepts health insurance. That's a first for FI.

"Hopefully we'll have better health care," said Deputy Mayor Tom Nolter, who took credit for bringing LI's largest hospital system to the beach.

Those latest developments from the May 11 meeting were far more positive than the acrimony that permeated budget approval at the preceding April meetings, when critics called out the board for sloppy paperwork, granting itself the option of taking a $9,000 annual stipend instead of health insurance and giving the mayor an annual pay raise from $1,500 to $36,500.

MORE DRAMA

A vocal crowd of residents spoke out in opposition of the pay raises while a few supporters spoke out in support of the tax hike.

Steve Einig, a former village trustee who lost to Mallott in the last mayoral race, was among those who expressed concern that the raise was too much during the April 13 public hearing for the budget.

"I was surprised and not happy with a board that gave itself a raise the way it did...it's a precedent that really concerns me," Einig said.

Mallott maintained that he and his board need to be compensated for the hours they put in after Sandy.

"We need to feel that were getting something for doing this," the mayor said. "Sandy's not this year. Sandy's the next 10 years."

Mallott then suggested Einig should wonder it would be like if the election turned out differently.

"God works in mysterious ways Steven," he said. "I don't why he gave
me the job and not you."

Einig replied, "That's ok."

Public concern over when the Sandy pay would be repealed was not allayed.

"It was a brutal decision," said Matthew Blake, the only trustee to vote against the budget and its raise. "We didn't all come out on the same page. It's hard for me to imagine not having boots on the ground doing the job that being done right now... I will not support the continuation of the salary if the workload is coming down. there needs to be that level of discipline to peel it back."

But then when the board voted to pass the budget on April 27, Judy Steinman, Ocean Beach's Fire Island Association delegate and a former trustee candidate, pounced after the board opened a continuation of the budget public hearing without listing the item on the public agenda.

"I am furious at what I perceive as sloppy and uncaring procedure by this board," said Steinman, who also wrote a letter to the village ethic board calling for an investigation. "I'm really offended by the lack of professionalism. What the heck is the point of holing a public hearing--it's window dressing--if the comments aren't used in your deliberations?"

Mallott conceded, "We were a little sloppy I guess." Village attorney Ken Gray later admitted to a typo on the agenda in reference to an emergency contract.

SHORING UP

Village officials have voiced that a five-year plan is being hashed out to get Ocean Beach back to pre-Sandy conditions, but caution that the specifics are changing daily.

"It's nothing we can put out fingers on yet as far as numbers and deadlines," Mallott said.

Meanwhile, workers are hammering away.

Half of the beach access crosswalks were rebuilt as of the May 11 meeting and most should be ready by summer. Trapbags were installed in place of the decimated dunes cost $100,000. The board is spending $3,000 for lead paint and asbestos testing at Windswept before the expected $500,000 in repairs can begin. Two replacement blowers are being installed in the sewage plant for $35,000. And the replacement village water well is only going to be temporary--the new one will take about two years, depending upon the permitting process.

In other, non-Sandy business, the board spent $40,000 on a new Ford F250 for the fire department and passed a resolution recognizing the Ocean Beach Police Benevolent Association, the officers' union. Sgt. George Hesse said the full time officers are seeking contract protections for the first time.

Police headquarters, however, will be less permanent for the time being. A trailer that has been used in the interim is being replaced with a pre-fab structure that will be paid off $4,500 monthly in a 36-month lease, with the option of buying it for $1 at the end.

The lack of a holding cell in the building means suspects that require being held behind bars will have to be shipped off the Third Precinct stationhouse in Bay Shore, police said.

 
OB, Saltaire Govts Plan for Post Sandy Summer Businesses Busy Getting Ready as Feds Remove Debris, to Mixed Approvals PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 25 March 2013 14:46
Ocean Beach continued its mad dash of preparing for the Memorial Day summer kickoff amid Sandy's aftermath at the village board's last winter meeting before catastrophic clean-up costs get fully aired during the spring budget hearings in April.

The meeting was held March 2, the same day that a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers-led storm debris clean-up project with a March 31 deadline  belatedly got underway after a reported month-long string of contract-protest hold-ups. Workers later began working 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to complete the mission in time. Mallott has urged homeowners to call their own carter, doubting the Army Corp's contractors.

Village officials said the cost of superstorm repairs are estimated at nearly $4 million, a figure they expect to rise by at least another million dollars. By contrast, Saltaire village officials estimated their Federal Emergency Management Agency storm reimbursement application at $15-$20 million. The good news is talks are underway with federal officials to have a fully funded beach and dune replenishment project, possibly as early as this fall.

"The numbers are just staggering," Ocean Beach Mayor James Mallot told residents at the Islip fire house, the interim meeting space one town  over from the temporary village office on mainland Long Island. "You have to bear with us, we're working as fast as we can."

The daunting tasks ahead overshadowed largely workaday regular village business, such as approving new business permits, hiring five extra  seasonal cops and pumping out 40,000 gallons of sludge from the sewage plant. Then there's the added work of redrilling one of the village water wells to keep faucets flowing, expediting construction of a new fire department communications tower to help restore phone and Internet  service, requiring all structures have electrical inspections to prevent fires and having businesses install back-flow valves to protect the water supply.


Fire Island Has To Go?

Village officials and residents are likewise cautiously optimistic about the feds fixing their beach while all involved brace for the big questions that come with post-Sandy coastal reconstruction.

"There's clearly a lot of ambiguity about where the [dune] line is going to be," Trustee Matthew Blake said of the biggest hang up in the beach renourishment plan talks that come as New York State has offered to buy out coastal homeowners instead of rebuilding those likely to be washed away in the future. "We don't know."

Still, homeowners in the crowd expressed surprise and support upon hearing news of the proposed Army Corps funded beach renourishment--regardless of its uncertainty that has prompted the village and Town of Islip to simultaneously prepare a $6 million local taxpayer funded alternative project as a backup should the proposal fall through. Uncertaintly rose when Mallott shared his takeaway from a meeting with officials involved in the federal plan.

"It seemed to be the consensus in the room that houses on Fire Island would have to go," he said. "We have to think about the common good."

In the meantime, the village has built a makeshift dune with $30,000 worth of geocubes, is following Saltaire's lead by spending $80,000 to install erosion-control TrapBags--a "rapidly deployable cellular containment system"--is spending about $40,000 on beach scraping and will replace the lifeguard shack that washed away. The docks may take up to $1 million to repair. And since the ferry terminal complex was demolished for $75,000, the police station, freight storage area and bathrooms will be replaced with trailers this summer.

Saltaire Relaxes Contruction Permit Deadlines

To the west in Saltaire, FI's second biggest village held its March 9 meeting, the first back on home turf since one two weeks after Sandy was following by a string of Manhattan meetings. It came the same day the village--like much of the island--was flooded from a nor'easter that preceded that weekend.

Officials there also pegged a back-up beach rebuilding plan at $6 million, estimated they've spent $700,000 so far on clean-up, praised the TrapBags for holding up in the storm that week, held an un-participated-in public hearing about property taxes possibly piercing the new 2-percent cap and announced that they would not have to pass a law to relax the summer construction moritorium.

"People are going to have to accept a little inconvenience," Saltaire Mayor Robert Cox said, referring to the board deciding they can provide waivers for construction permit holders to allow homeowners to continue rebuilding through the busy season without drafting new legislation. The board noted that won't mean construction will be going on all hours after complaining about not having received a written plan regarding the debris clean-up project simultaneously underway outside village hall.

"You have to understand they're mobilizing a major operation," Mario Posillico, the village administrator, told the board. "You have to respect that to a certain degree."

Saltaire officials also discussed their ongoing negotiations with Verizon, which they said plans to install a wireless landline telephone system to replace the current storm-ravaged lines--a proposition that means the village's subscribers to Verizon's Internet service may have to find a new provider. The same concerns over spotty phone and web connections is what prompted OB to pass an emergency resolution allowing the fire department to build a new communications tower that proponents said will improve connections for residents and first responders alike.

Back To Biz

Before the OB village board got into the oceanfront talk, bay-side businesses downtown required attention.

Following a pair of public hearings, trustees approved the owners of Bambootique to open a new retail clothing shop and for the proprietors of The Palms Hotel Group to buy iconic CJ's Bar and Restaurant.

Lindsay Patrick, who owns Bambootique with her husband Sean, an eco-friendly trendy apparel and beach gear store, said the new women's clothing store replacing the liquor shop will be called the Salty Stitch and will be "a little bit higher end."

Laura Mercogliano, who owns the Palms with her husband, Chris, said they plan to remodel CJ's and upgrade the food but keep the same hometown feel that made people fall in love with the establishment that invented the Rocket Fuel, Fire Island's most famous beverage. They will also go back into the rotation of being the lone year-round eatery, a role Castaway Bay & Grill filled this winter. She touted it as a sign of Fire Island's post-Sandy revival.

“There has been a lot of media coverage about the devastation Hurricane Sandy brought to Fire Island, but very little about our progress and restoration efforts since then,” Mercogliano said. “This is a disservice to small business owners as well as the public who come to enjoy Fire Island.”
 
Debris Removal Crews Prepare to Start 24 Hour Clean Up PDF Print E-mail
Written by Nicole Pressly Wolf   
Saturday, 23 March 2013 14:46

YAPHANK, N.Y. – Starting this evening, residents on Fire Island will notice the debris removal crews setting up lights and generators and taking other steps to safely conduct nighttime debris removal from rights of way. This is a push to be able to meet the end of March completion goal.
"While this move to around-the-clock operations brings minor inconveniences, it is expected to benefit the residents on Fire Island,” said Lt. Col. John Knight, New York Recovery Field Office commander. “The 24-hour operations will help us meet our goal at the end of the month allowing the island residents time to prepare for the summer season.”
Temporary Debris Site in Davis Park, One of Many on FI
On March 12, the contractor began 24-hour barge operations to move debris from staging areas to the mainland for shipping to Tunnel Hill Reclamation Landfill in Perry County, Ohio. Sifted sand and chipped vegetative debris will remain on Fire Island.
Full-time island residents will notice lights and power generators running after dark so debris crews can work safely on the right of way in an effort to meet the end of March goal. They may also notice an increase in night time truck traffic moving debris to staging areas.
“We’re going to get this done as quickly and safely as we possibly can,” Knight said. “We appreciate the understanding of the Fire Island residents that these operations are necessary to meet our March goal, and regret any inconvenience this may cause residents.”
Nearly 1,600 Fire Island homes damaged by the storm are currently eligible for debris removal assistance. The Federal Emergency Management Agency tasked the Corps Nov. 24 to assist with removing debris on Fire Island as part of the federal Hurricane Sandy response and recovery efforts for New York. An estimated 62,000 cubic yards of debris is eligible for removal – enough to cover a football field up to three stories high.
 
In honor of the passing of Murray Barbash March 13, noted Long Island conservationist and founder of Dunewood. PDF Print E-mail
Written by David Crohn   
Saturday, 23 March 2013 14:58

FROM OUR ARCHIVES:

Dunewood’s Evolution: From Cookie Cutter Community to Singular Getaway
Voume 49, Issue 8, 2005 
By David Crohn

Anyone who’s been to Dunewood can appreciate its unique character: with its bucolic appeal and just enough activity to keep you busy during the summer, it is both characteristic of Fire Island and unlike any of the other 17 communities island wide. That’s due in no small measure to its sui generis pedigree. Dunewood is the only planned community on the island, the result of Murray Barbash’s tenacious effort and percipient vision, without which the community might still be a refuse dump used by Fair Harbor to the east.

Don’t Call It Levittown
A glance at Dunewood’s DNA can be seen in a promotional brochure dating from the 1970s. Alongside copy trumpeting Dunewood as “ Fire Island ’s gem” is a diagram of the original house that could be purchased in this “club-like family colony.” It has a 24 by 15-square foot living room, two bedrooms that are ten feet by eight and ten by ten; and an adjoining bathroom and kitchen. A second model, exactly the same except for a modest guest wing, was also available. All were no more than 700 square feet. Barbash said he liked the house, which he first saw in a magazine in an ad from a company called Tech Built, because it was designed to last long and was easy to mass produce. Most of all, they could be “swiveled,” placed at right angles to each other to create a modicum of multiplicity. “It was Monopoly style,” said Don Goldman, Dunewood’s hometown real estate broker and unofficial local historian. As the years have gone by, it’s become a local pastime to spot that original structure within the variety of additions—decks, extra rooms and other additions–that have gone up to bring diversity and charm to the architecture of the neighborhood. “People like to call it Levittown , but I think it’s turned out pretty nice,” Barbash said, with the dry wit that is his hallmark. The original model was built in the spring of 1957 on the corner of West and Central. It sold for $11,990 in the early ‘60s. That was the beginning of the first phase, which saw about eight houses fill up Central Walk to the ocean. Finding funding for what seemed like a pretty out-there project at the time provided additional challenges to what was already slow going. His company garnered investments whenever possible— there were a lot of far-flung relatives in Queens and elsewhere who have since been bought out—and built almost entirely in the spring. And with very limited bridge access and the storms of 1962, “It was high adventure,” Barbash said. In 1968 another dozen, a little bigger and slightly more expensive, were built from Central to the bay. Meanwhile, Barbash and his brother-in-law, prominent lawyer Irving Like, became enmeshed in a battle against Robert Moses, who wanted to build a highway through Fire Island . With underwhelming support from Governor Nelson Rockefeller, the Fire Island Association won, and the Fire Island National Seashore was formed. Fearing a possible conflict of interest, Barbash waited and put up another crop of houses on the bay in 1980. Increased building code requirements and a new market upped the selling price: $200,000. “That’s when we first started to make a profit,” Barbash said, adding that at around the same time he decided to keep the area zoned for residential properties only. “I figured I’ll make a couple less bucks but I’ll have a great life here,” he said. And Barbash still enjoys summers in Dunewood at a bayfront house nicknamed the Doge’s Palace. His three children are also homeowners.

As Time Goes By
Dunewood has stayed true to its founder’s original vision—small, quiet, family oriented—and its 99 homes can only be bought or rented; no shares allowed. “[People in Dunewood] don’t want the noise of party housing,” Goldman said. And it has flowered. Young residents have kept the place fresh by taking it in new directions architecturally. As the sons and grandsons of the original families from the ‘50s, 60s and 80s continue to come to enjoy the beach and vintage-era tennis courts, the houses are growing with additions complete with bedrooms and bathrooms. One family, the Grosses, have made the most of the Dunewood mold by adding a high-ceilinged living area. Designed by Eric Schiller, whose handiwork can be seen all over town, the space is airy, sun-filled and very inviting. And then there’s the Forbes family, who in 2002 became the first family since 9/11 to become year-round residents. They formerly rented a summer home and lived in Battery Park. After the attacks Ray and Cynthia sought an escape from the emotional and financial ravages of downtown life; they’ve found one in Dunewood. “I just had the strongest sense that this was what we should do,” Cynthia Forbes said. They bought and winterized their summer home, enrolled their children in the Woodhull School and say it’s the best decision they’ve ever made. “I feel much more grounded here—like our life is in control.” The Forbeses are the latest to catch on to Dunewood’s appeal—but they’re not the last, and if current trends are any indicator of where the western end of Fire Island is headed, their timing was excellent. One of Barbash’s original projects, a 4,000 square foot home with four bedrooms and other recently added features, just hit the market at a record breaking asking price: $1.2 million. A long way from $11,990.

 
OB's Jan Board Meeting Approves Demos and Raises Mayor's Pay PDF Print E-mail
Friday, 25 January 2013 15:47
Ocean Beach village boardmembers approved resolutions to demolish the ferry terminal, police station and boathouse that were badly damaged by Superstorm Sandy at their first meeting of the New Year, then voted a hefty pay raise for Mayor James Mallott, citing the extra hours he's put in during the recovery effort.

Logistics of juggling reconstruction amid inevitable beach season crowds weighed heavy on the trustees during the sparsely attended Jan. 5 special meeting held at the Islip firehouse, where the board has met since the usual locations were ruined in the storm and village hall was temporarily moved to an East Islip storefront. While details are still being worked out on the island-wide debris clean-up effort and proposed beach renourishment, officials did their best to answer what questions they could -- but plans for Windswept are a sticking point.

"We have to have a better plan than we've had," Mallott said of the recovery effort, which includes raising village hall up two feet on top of renovations that were already underway when Sandy struck. "We have to build up, we have to elevate everything that we can."

He said that once the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers-led flotsam-clearing project gets underway, trash carters will likely use a Captree State Park parking lot as a temporary dump site before the debris is shipped to a landfill or incinerator. The mayor asked that residents hold off on piling up their garbage on the curb before the clearing work begins since it will become harder to remove once it starts breaking down in the elements.

"It looks like hell over there," Mallott said of the garbage piles waiting to be cleared. He added that it should look better soon because "the calvary's coming."

While the plan is to clear the storm debris before Memorial Day, temporary structures such as a trailer doubling as the interim police station may be the norm this summer, boardmembers warned. The freight may have to be stored in a cargo container. Demolition of the ferry terminal complex and attached buildings is expected to take 30 days once it commences, according to the village clerk.

"There will be some patience required of all of us for the next year," Trustee Greg Pace said of the aesthetically displeasing predictions coming to the downtown.

On the beachfront, the village is repairing geotubes, adding new "tear bags" to buttress the geotubes on the dune line while negotiations continue with various oversight agencies about rebuilding the beach.

Less monumental a task but equally perplexing is where to house the youth group this summer since Windswept will likely not be renovated in time, officials said.

"The logistics of it are really frightening," Mallott said of making repairs to the Windswept house, which was badly flooded.

The house had yet to be cleaned out as of the meeting but since it's a village property, reconstruction requires putting out a bid for contractors and paying prevailing wages -- all while there is more critical work pending.

The youth group may be temporarily relocated this year until the repairs can be managed, boardmembers said.

"One of the challenges that we've had is disassociating youth group and Windswept," said Trustee Matthew Blake.

Blake was also troubled by the board's move to give Mallott a raise, increasing his annual salary from $1,500 to $36,500. It was the first time the freshman lawmaker broke rank and didn't vote with the rest of the board in favor.

"My vote has no reflection on what I think has been a job well done," Blake said after the vote, calling it a "philosophical issue."

Mallott said the move was intended to match the full-time work week he puts in for the job -- which has only been even more time consuming since Sandy.

"My life has changed so much in the past two months," he said, saying he's doing village business from 5 a.m. to 7 p.m.  many days. "I need to get a little compensation...we need to get a little recognition. We're in this knee deep."
 
Hurricane Sandy Devastates Much of Central FI, Three Breaches Form Fire Islanders Fight Back with Humor, Shovels and Planning PDF Print E-mail
Written by By Nicole Pressly Wolf And Timothy Bolger   
Saturday, 12 January 2013 16:56

November, 2012

 

Sand bags in POW. Nov. 15, 2012 By Tim Bolger for FIN

 

“It is like the Wizard of Oz. It was way worse than the photos. We thought we could salvage some of it, but no way. We thought we might be ok, as we don’t live directly on the ocean. We were wrong,” said Atlantique summer resident Nancy Slotnick of her home of seven years with husband Dan Aferiat and son Joshua.
“Imagine if you tipped a house on its side, everything from the kitchen and other rooms went through the living room and piled in a corner…fridge, oven, furniture, everything,” said Slotnick. A unique sense of humor and resilience helps Slotnick get through this time, as she said they plan to rebuild and feel for those who have lost their primary residence.
“Our chimney fought back hard. But it lost the battle. My husband’s kayak was stuffed out the hole where the brick chimney used to stand.”
They plan to definitely be in Atlantique next summer. Thinking outside the box, Slotnick said “maybe in a tent.”
Super storm Sandy in October changed Fire Island forever, leaving a trail of destruction from Democrat Point on the western tip to Smith Point to the east, yet many locals forecast next summer will be as sunny as ever.

The 32-mile-long barrier island breached in two of its parklands, dunes were largely flattened and at least 150 homes are estimated to have been destroyed in addition to about a dozen that washed away. Seven of those were in Davis Park, which is widely reported to rank hardest hit along with Atlantique and Ocean Bay Park. Most structures have flood damage, including many in the middle of the island.

'It was bad for everybody," said Suzy Goldhirsch, president of the Fire Island Association. "For some, it was beyond bad--it was devastating."

Most officials believe the island will be back in business by next season despite the losses. But there are still many unknowns, such as how the dunes will be built and whether homeowners will face lengthy red tape or condemnation.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is using dredged sand to fill in a breach at Smith Point County Park but the Fire Island National Seashore has said a second breach at Old Inlet in the Otis Pike High Dune Wilderness Area is closing naturally. A third breach in the neighboring Westhampton barrier island is also being filled.

As the recovery efforts turn from restoring critical infrastructure and ending the mandatory evacuation--which about 100 people, including the Davis Park Association president, ignored--to assessing property damage, the mammoth task of repairing and rebuilding is getting underway.

"Everyone wants it to be exactly the way it was, but given the magnitude of this storm, that’s not going to be possible," FINS Superintendent Chris Soller said, noting the dune line moved 20-25 feet north.

Islip and Brookhaven town building inspectors have been deployed to deem which of the about 4,000 structures on FI are safe or uninhabitable without repairs.

The Suffolk County Water Authority declared the water safe to drink in each of the 17 communities except Davis Park as of Nov. 21. It was deemed safe for toilet and firefighting use about a week after the storm. The SCWA advised residents to let their faucets run for 15 minutes as a precaution. Ocean Beach never had an interruption in water service due to the bravery of town employees securing the pumps.

The Long Island Power Authority was restoring electricity to many homes on the island well after much of greater LI saw their lights turned back on. Homeowners who haven't already inspected the damage can expect to find a sticker on their house informing them if they need to hire an electrician before power can be safely restored. Electrical equipment that came in contact with floodwater will need to be replaced.

Ocean Beach and Saltaire each had daring stories of village officials putting themselves in harms way to save their local water systems from being contaminated during the storm. Ocean Beach's sewage plant was not compromised, but Saltaire leaders said some septic tanks broke or overflowed.

"Be careful what you step in," Saltaire Village Mayor Robert Cox said at a Nov. 17 board meeting, where he suggested all homeowners get their houses inspected overall, not just those required to.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency is expected to reimburse municipalities for eventual beach renourishment projects but only homeowners whose FI houses are their primary residence should expect disaster assistance aid.

Propane tanks littered communities after the storm along with debris and even kayaks. It took locals firefighters several days to clear walkways and gather the tanks.

Although there is no town-by-town breakdown of specific damage yet, the storm's wrath is evident while walking through outlying communities or downtown Ocean Beach. And so was Fire Island's resiliency.

"A lot of people have war stories," said Dale Wyckoff, the Ocean Beach postmaster. "We are just hoping that everything gets back to normal."
------------------------------------------------

Atlantique Islip Town Beach & Marina
Islip town officials said the Atlantique Marina and Beach facilities remain closed to the public for the time being. The concrete walkway was partly broken near the ocean and the docks were badly damaged on the bay side.

The newly renovated 'Cession Stand's roll down gate was damaged and chairs in its outdoor seating area were scattered in the sand.
An Islip Town Bay Constable chased a News reporter out of the marina.

Atlantique
The rustic and tight-knit community that just celebrated its centennial is now trying to get back on its feet after a storm of the century. Atlantique has 45 homes and so far has five total losses and four or five that need to be put back on their pilings.
“Our neighbors were so disturbed by seeing our house open that they took and held some possessions for us. We are distributing our possessions among neighbors. Atlantique is very close and supportive, said Slotnick, whose home is one of the total losses. “We definitely want to rebuild. There is a mass panic for contractors. It’s going to be very interesting.”

The bay front Appalachian Mountain Club's Fire Island cabin was spared major damage and is expected to reopen in time for the 2013 season, according to the nonprofit environmental conservation group.

"Some moderate water damage was sustained in the cabin and in other structures on the property," the group said on its website.


Cherry Grove
Cherry Grove's robust dune system appears to have cushioned Sandy's blow, although the waves took a bite out of the dunes and, like the rest of the island, destroyed staircases to the beach. Flooding on Bay Walk also occurred.

The community's Dune Fund recently held a cleanup effort and has been raising more money to repair the damage, but much work remains to be done. Like other communities that have boardwalks for sidewalks, there is a roller-coaster effect from the water damage.

Community leaders are now turning their attention toward the toxic mold that is spawned by flooding.

"Mold is a health hazard," Diane Romano, president of the Cherry Grove Community Association said in a statement. "If you had hurricane flood water in your home – even just a few inches – there’s a very good chance you have mold spores growing in the floors, carpeting, wallboard (especially sheetrock) and even ceiling tiles."

She suggested property owners tackle the problem before it gets spreads and repair costs increase.

Other than that, the Grove is tied with Fire Island Pines for least Sandy damage.

Corneille Estates
While enduring much of the same bay and ocean storm surges as the rest of the island, Corneille played a critical role at the height of the super storm.

The Woodhull School became a temporary shelter for about 20 of the approximately 100 people who ignored the mandatory evacuation order and either refused rescue or were out of reach of first responders. According to Officer Nolan, about 45 folks were reportedly housed overnight (residents and emergency responders).

The schoolhouse survived without damage, but students were bused to temporary schools on mainland LI once classes resumed a week later while the evac order was still in effect.

"Despite their own struggles, Woodhull School teachers, bus drivers and administrative staff members worked throughout the weekend so that when students entered their new temporary classrooms [at William Floyd Elementary School in Shirley]
On Monday, they were greeted by familiar faces, and found their personal notebooks and materials already in their desks," the Fire Island School District said on their website.
“We all pulled together for the children. It was very emotional. You have to remember these kids were homeless at the time and we provided security and familiarity during this disaster,” said Nurse Janet LaViolette to the News on November 16.
In a sign of hope and endurance, LaViolette mentioned that the school’s handmade peace sign stood up to the storm and remained unscathed.


Students returned to Woodhull on Monday, Nov. 26.

Davis Park
The easternmost FI community that saw some of the worst damage island-wide is facing unique challenges in recovery.

Mary Parker, president of the Davis Park Association--among those who rode out the storm despite evac orders--said residents and contractors are having difficulty getting on and off the island.

That's because the breach in the federal wilderness area cut off the 8-mile route through Smith Point and forces drivers to go twice the distance through Robert Moses State Park. And once the Davis Park ferries stop running after Thanksgiving weekend, the closest service is via Fire Island Pines, three miles away.

The troubles pale in comparison to the gauntlet Sandy threw down for Parker and nine others who stayed in Davis Park, including three other firefighters like herself.

"It was pretty scary," she said, recalling the hurricane-force winds rocking her bungalow back and forth. "My house ended up being a little island with water all around it."

She said the Casino bar and restaurant, which had been replaced after it was swept out to sea in a 1996 blizzard, survived Sandy and remains one of the few oceanfront businesses on the island.

Dunewood
This planned community nested between Lonelyville and Fair harbor seems to have suffered little damage. News reporters as of this time did not hear back from any locals.

Fair Harbor
Sandy struck while long-awaited renovations were underway at the Fair Harbor firehouse, but the relatively minor setback was indicative of how the rest of the community fared.

Widespread leveling of the dunes did not skip Fair Harbor and many oceanfront homes were left tattered, but only one on Broadway was damaged to the point it was falling down.

"We did what we could do," said Scott Cherveny, chief of the Fair Harbor Fire Department, whose team shut off gas and power to all homes in his coverage area despite troublesome manpower shortages.

Renovations on the firehouse resumed two weeks after the storm and are expected to be completed by spring.

Brett Roberts, chair of the Fair Harbor Fire District's board of commissioners, is keeping his fingers crossed that it's the last Sandy-sized storm he sees in his lifetime.

"We're hoping that was a 100-year storm and we won't have to worry about the next one if its 100 years away," he joked.

Fire Island Summer Club
Summer Club
This condominium association just west of Cornielle Estates was impacted significantly by the hurricane. About 11to 15 houses out of a total of 40 were “impacted pretty badly with about six to seven very significantly, ”  according to resident Scott Hirsch, Almost all houses had some impact even if just trees and debris. Debris and sand had piled up on 60% of the roads and homes.


Fire Island Pines
It seems Sandy gave a break to the Pines, which is still rebuilding from a November 2011 fire that gutted The Pavilion and the LaFontaine Building, two downtown hubs.

"The Pines sustained the least amount of damage of any Fire Island community," said Jon Wilner of the Fire Island Property Owners Association.

There was some flooding, broken bulkheads, eight damaged pools and lost sand. A fire alarm at Whyte Hall turned out to be a false alarm when electricity was being restored.

Wilner said The Pavilion is expected to be completed in April. He's also hoping for a beach scraping project to rebuild the dunes.

“Time and again, we have witnessed this community’s extraordinary resilience," said Matthew Blesso, a partner in Fire Island Pines Ventures, which owns 80 percent of the commercial district. "We have no doubt that The Pines will bounce back from this setback, clean up, rebuild, and be ready to welcome back its residents and visitors in no time at all.”

Fire Island National Seashore
Fire Island National Seashore is currently involved in a multiple agency storm recovery effort. The temporarily blacked-out Fire Island Lighthouse, Sailor's Haven, Watch Hill and the federal wilderness area remain closed after Sandy while repairs continue, although there is no estimated reopening time.

While crews have made quick work of fixing broken boardwalks, cleaning up debris and building berms from scattered sand, the wait-and-see approach the Seashore has taken to the breach is a touchier subject.

"We are monitoring it regularly," said FINS superintendent Chris Soller to the News, who maintains that the breach is closing on its own and doesn't need to be filled in with sand like local lawmakers and residents have urged.

The superintendent said allowing the breach to close naturally improves bay water quality, marine habitat and salt marshes as well as helps FI's bayside rebuild. But South Shore LI residents are worried the breach leaves them vulnerable to more flooding. Soller said the seashore is prepared to take action if the breach doesn't close.

Soller has imposed an emergency closure of access to the breach in Fire Island at Old Inlet. It is not allowed to take boats of any kind into the breach, or to walk into the breach on foot. The closure has been put in place because strong currents through the breach are hazardous to pedestrians and boaters. In addition, motorized transportation within the designated wilderness area where the breach occurred is prohibited. Finally, NPS staff are monitoring the breach with sensitive scientific equipment. The closure will remain in effect until further notice.
The seashore has to determine how to rebuild a sustainable dune system.

The only FINS facility to reopen so far is the William Floyd Estate in Mastic Beach. The lighthouse has since been relit.

Kismet
The Island’s westernmost community, which suffered serious damage itself, played a key role in post-Sandy response immediately after the super storm struck.

The Kismet Fire Department volunteered their firehouse as the command post where they coordinated various rescue and law enforcement agencies to get first responders at all levels of government on the same page.

"Instead of having an outside agency try and come in and not know the culture," said Kismet Fire Chief Dominic Bertucci, "we were able to maintain control on Fire Island and understand the needs of the people."

FINS rangers, New York State Troopers controlling the Robert Moses Causeway, Suffolk County authorities, town bay constables, utility crews and others were among those meeting daily through Thanksgiving eve, when the command post was shut down.

Bertucci, who's also an FDNY captain, said he and Kismet firefighter Jay Lippert, the longtime FINS chief ranger who retired last year, were uniquely qualified given their experience running past command posts.

One of the biggest problems compounding the crisis in the early aftermath was a lack of water flowing to fire hydrants across much of the island, Bertucci said. Ocean Beach, luckily, had one of the few functioning hydrants nearby when a house fire broke out two days after the storm, he said. Another community might not have been as fortunate.

"That was a scary point because we didn't know what to expect," Bertucci said of when his firefighters heard the OB blaze come over the radio while Kismet and neighboring communities still had no working hydrants.

Frustrating still was the difficulty in communicating during the blackouts and lack of cell service and then having to combat misinformation, like the false rumor that the National Guard was sent to FI. Rescuing those who ignored the evac order was also harrowing.

"It wasn’t like a storm surge came out of nowhere," Bertucci said, noting the three-day's notice. "They put first responders in jeopardy...we were wading through waist-deep water to double check who stayed behind."

Rescues were made, like a now infamous one by kayak to a woman in Seaview who was taken to the Woodhull School, turned shelter.

The community has since been hard at work rebuilding the boardwalk in the marina, digging out the four-feet deep sand off the sidewalks and hauling it back to the beach, where it's being used to build berms.

Lonelyville
Howard Blank, long-time resident of this often aptly named town reports that there is only land damage in Lonelyville and no structural damage. There are 100 homes, and no significant damage as the surge seemed to flow under and around most homes.
Oakleyville
Only two homes in this little hamlet of ten homes on the bayside of the island took bay water flooding. Paul Muldoon, a year-round resident and caretaker of five other homes in the community stayed throughout the storm. Going “old school” Muldoon had block ice to cool food, wood for his stove and remarkably didn’t even use the generator he stores for electricity—just used candles.
“I had everything I needed. Only thing I worried about was going off, that they wouldn’t let me back on.” Muldoon stayed in his house eight consecutive days without power until he said he “tired of it” and went to the mainland.

Ocean Bay Park
It was Friday morning, November 16 and Chris Lomolino just walked to the ocean from the OBP ferry terminal to see the damage to her home. Her face expressed it all —complete shock and sadness.
“I saw a picture of my house online and thought, ‘Well at least its there. It’s not a total loss. We will fix it.’ But now I see it and it is bad; a total loss.”
The home, second in from the ocean on Oneida, was tossed off its foundation and buried in a few feet of sand. The house, now leaning slightly on its right side, seems intact until a closer look reveals it to be squashed down into the sand.

While the devastation across much of the island is shocking, Ocean Bay Park's destruction is huge. With 21 homes condemned, the town has been likened to a war zone on more than one occasion, its residents suffering shock, anger, exasperation at the bureaucracy facing rebuilding and yes, even humor.
Walking with some residents who came out Nov 16 to see their summer homes, a few couples joked to one another, “If you see wood with number 86—that’s my home, please return it.”

Even the Fire Chief kept his sense of humor. "We've been eating very well thanks to everyone telling us to take food out of their freezer," joked Ocean Bay Park Fire Department Chief Michael Horton who had been living in the firehouse for two weeks except the actual day of the storm, after a hasty evacuation to higher ground in Point O’Woods the night of the storm. The pool table was being used as an ever-changing cornucopia of snacks.
Horton quickly turned to the serious task of rebuilding, questioning the logic behind condemning oceanfront houses and taking $1 million homes off the tax rolls.

"At some point the rate they're going you're going to end up in [what's now] the middle of the island as oceanfront property," Horton said.

He joined calls for island residents to lobby for an expedited beach replenishment project.

"Fire Island has to fight for all of Fire Island and they all have to be on the same page," he said.  "There's no reason we can't be 100 percent by next summer. As long as the government agencies don’t get in our way.”

“We never went off duty,” said volunteer fireman Sean Coaffey.
The fire fighters stayed in the firehouse until the bay water surged in. They took over a home in the east end of POW, on one of the highest bluffs on the island, that Ed Horton, volunteer fireman and contractor built and got the ok from the owner.
The eight fire fighters took the trucks, all equipment for fire fighting, food and generators up to this house on the bluff.
“We cooked a hot dinner and watched the dunes disappear.”
The next day, they made their way back. It was complete devastation.
Although their pickup truck got stuck, they were just glad to see the bay-front fire house still standing.
“We didn’t think there was even going to be a fire house. But we just cleaned it out of four feet of water and two inches of muck,” said Coaffey.

Ocean Beach
FI's unofficial capital ranks somewhere in the middle of the field when it comes to Sandy damage.

The village's groins are fully exposed, the lifeguard shack was washed away and all the beach staircases are gone. Like neighboring areas, they've already begun building berms with the scattered sand and have buried the geotubes again. The dunes exposed some little remembered and long-buried debris, according to Ron Smith, a village employee. The cement blocks, probably buried in the dunes in the 60s caused a lot of damage as they moved from the beach and broke through homes. “Some interesting things are covered up in those dunes,” said Smith.
With more infrastructure, there had more to lose, but the village is bouncing back quicker than others thanks to the support staff it has in place.

"They say it takes a village," Ian Levine, spokesman for the Ocean Beach Fire Department, told nearly 1,000 residents at an emergency meeting in Manhattan. "Well, it takes a little bit more than that. It takes an island. And that island is Fire Island."

Mayor James Mallott ordered Ocean Beach Police Sgt. George Hesse to rescue Kevin Schelling, superintendent of public works, from the storm surge as he and his brother boarded up critical water system equipment to prevent contamination.

“It was like a raging river,” Hesse said as he recalled the march up Bungalow Walk to find Schelling after the ocean broke through the dunes. "I've never been prouder to work with such a team."

Billy Svingos, a 50 year resident and contractor in OB, acted fast during the storm and built a fire watch on the top of his  building facing the ferry terminal. Here emergency responders kept watch all day and night for fires. It fulfilled its duty, the Surfview fire was spotted from this watch.


The village hired Rick Gimble, who recently retired from Islip town, to consult on FEMA aid. The board recently approved a $2 million, five-year bond for cash to fund cleanup efforts.
The village-damaged assets are estimated to be between 2-4 million, according to town clerk/treasurer Steven Brautigam. We are now concentrating on an organized and speedy removal of garbage.
The village lost from three to five homes and 100s suffered water damage and compromised electric.
"It's a horror," said Joan, a Bungalow Walk resident. Then, she thought about it, and added, "I guess it could be worse. My neighbors across the street lost everything."

Scott Hirsch, owner of The Island Mermaid restaurant and bar, where at least 18 inches of floodwater got in, was thankful for the lack of serious injuries.

"Everything else is replaceable, for the most part," he said. Still, as he first inspected the damage to his popular establishment, the wheels were turning. "The problem really is all the things you can't see yet."
Brian O’Hanley, owner of the long-established Housers Bar and Hideaway Restaurant, talked to the News standing on wet sand on what was once his expansive deck and dining area in the back of his bayfront establishments. He and two employees were hard at work carrying debris and cleaning from the flooding inside. “And I just realized insurance doesn’t cover anything outside,” shrugged O’Hanley. Tentative discussion of the OB Restaurant organization pulling together.

Mallott and village board members reminded the crowd that FI protects LI from the brunt of the storm surge. That means FI's beaches and dunes need to be rebuilt if it's to do its job again.

"We can't do this piecemeal, we have to do all of Fire Island," Mallott said.



Point 'O Woods
This historically exclusive community earned a name change to Point 'O Floods.

The storm surge easily rolled over their dunes already eroded from prior nor'easters following their non-participation in the 2009 beach renourishment project. Three-foot deep ocean waters that raced through the hamlet forced the six people who ignored evacuation orders there to break into the house on the highest grounds, FI fire officials tell the News.

The Woodsies did not return our calls, but POW crews working at the archway that welcomes visitors at the pier played a leading role in a News12 Long Island helicopter aerial video of FI's Sandyscape.middle isl

The community was among the first to fill so-called Geotubes with sand that was pushed hundreds of feet south, and using them to start rebuilding the dunes. They brought in heavy machinery to push the remaining sand over the Geotubes.

According to a map of the village in the OBP Firehouse, POW faces10 condemned homes and 21 were deemed unsafe.

Robbin's Rest

“Everyone is pulling together. We owe much to two year-rounders Kevin Burke and Robert Burke, EMT and volunteer fireman. My house is a few in from the bay and took six inches, and it is some feet up from the ground. And we were lucky,” said Alan Altman, 40 year resident of RR.
The tight-knit community lost at least one oceanfront home, if not two homes out of forty houses on two walks. The 3rd house in, on the corner of Burma road was moved across Burma road and turned. As of date the owners hope they can move it back.
Art and Sharon Fiyalka’s home took on three feet of water. They were traveling back on the boat Nov. 16 with two heavy garbage bags.
“These have the only things we can save— three hand loomed rugs made by Art’s 91 year old mother,” said Sharon. “Everything else is now trash.”


Robert Moses State Park
The oldest New York State park named for the master builder who wanted to pave over FI remains closed until further notice.

The Robert Moses Causeway is reopened on the main span bridge but police maintain a roadblock checkpoint at the Fire Island Inlet bridge, allowing only residents and other authorized vehicles over.

The foundation has been eroded under the southernmost lanes of the causeway traffic circle that surrounds the needle at the base of the bridge. The boardwalk is splintered apart. And parts of the eastbound roadway reportedly collapsed onto a badly eroded beach between fields 5 through 3.

Ocean Parkway on neighboring Jones Beach Island remains closed between the causeway and Wantagh Parkway.

Saltaire

Like Ocean Beach, Saltaire survived Sandy with a heroic tale of a village official wading into oceanfront storm surge to save the drinking water supply.

In their case, water superintendent Larry Slack, armed with only a wrench, ripped off his shirt and dove into 3 feet of water the Tuesday of the storm to close a fastly leaking fire hydrant water main on Pacific Walk that he had to first find and dig out from underwater sand.

"The entire village was underwater for all intents and purposes," said Mayor Robert Cox. "It's not as bad as Long Beach...but it's significant."

Trustee John Zaccaro was credited with walking with crews in the floodwater to find homes that needed power and gas turned off.

Village Administrator Mario Posillico said about one third of the 400 houses in Saltaire are built on wetlands, meaning dozens of homeowners will have to deal with the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation when applying for permits to make repairs.

Some expressed interest in raising their houses up to FEMA-required heights, which vary depending upon the flood zone. Those already raised up on stilts fared best. The village board is also planning legislation to require waterproof wiring in homes.

Posillico estimates the village will seek $10 million in FEMA reimbursements, half for the beach repairs needed alone. Cox called talk of a seawall a "flight of fancy" and says residents should also cross their fingers for no nor'easter in the meantime.

One resident offered to form a "shovel brigade" to help get the rest of the sand off the streets and back on the beach. Another expressed concern over a coming "storm of mold" while the wet parts of houses are left to rot before reconstruction permits are approved.

"The boardwalks are pretty rollercoaster-y," said John Gill, adding that they were "clearly lifted up by the waters and dropped down."

Seaview
For the most part, Seaview dodged a bullet compared to their neighbors on either side.
The oceanfront looks OK, all things considering. One can see the dunegrass held part of the dunes in place.

The Seaview Association termed Gale Street the most damaged walkway near the ocean, where concrete blocks were lifted, cracked and broken like seashells. On the bay side of the same street, the marina was badly damaged, but one of its neighbors was upbeat.
According to Chris Ayarza, maintenance crew of about eight men, Seaview did pretty well. Only three streets washed out, out of 13 walks.

"I'm pleasantly surprised," said Adam Abrahms, whose bulkhead remained intact despite his "visions of catastrophe."

"The beach grass really saved me," he added, pointing to the underwater parts of his yard where the sand hadn't been washed away.

Down the block, the new bay front playground, bathrooms and pool survived the storm mostly unscathed, although the basketball courts will need resurfacing and the ball fields were left covered in debris.

A beachfront home in OBP gone. Nov. 2012. By Nicole Pressly Wolf

The bayfront in OBP after Sandy; note the flooded ferry terminal. By Erin Flynn

OB residents evacuate, November 28, 2012

Cornielle Estate Nov., 29, 2012 By Woody Slavan

 
Facebook Link PDF Print E-mail
Written by Ed Mattson   
Tuesday, 30 October 2012 21:05

Please go to our FACEBOOK  page for the latest on the hurricanes impact on Fire Island.

 
Schumer Provides Updates On Efforts to Protect Region and Plans To Respond to Damage PDF Print E-mail
Written by Nicole Pressly Wolf   
Sunday, 28 October 2012 20:04
U.S. Senator Charles E. Schumer today provided a briefing on local federal efforts to prepare for Hurricane/Tropical Storm Sandy, set to hit the region by Monday.  Schumer detailed plans of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA); Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA); the U.S. Coast Guard; the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers; and Long Island Power Authority (LIPA) to respond to the storm and clean up in its aftermath.

Schumer also called on the federal government to immediately get ready and be prepared for the state of New York to submit a full emergency disaster declaration after the storm hits and urged the President and FEMA to approve this without a delay. New York State has already submitted a pre-landfall disaster declaration request, which will provide federal funding for emergency protective services and will complement New York City and other municipalities’ own preparations for cleanup activities in the wake of the storm. New York State submitted its request on Saturday and Schumer urged the President and FEMA to approve it without delay.

"It appears all levels of government are acting in close coordination, which is critical in any emergency," said Schumer.  "This storm could well be the worst we've had in decades, so we all must be at the highest level of alert. I will continue to be in touch with federal agencies, to ensure they are provided the resources the city, state, and local governments need."

Schumer was in close contact with a number of federal agencies early this morning. After speaking with NOAA, FEMA, Army Corps of Engineers, U.S. Coast Guard and LIPA, Schumer briefed New Yorkers on how these agencies are preparing and plan to respond to the storm.

NOAA:
·         The agency explained that this storm will be much like a Nor’easter. Wind levels will be very high and prolonged wind can create large amounts of damage. This may cause 9.5 feet storm surges in Battery Park City. This is 3 feet more than Irene. NOAA went on to say that Port Jefferson, on Long Island, may see 8-10 feet in storm surge.

FEMA:
·         The agency said that there are 2 emergency preparedness centers for the region; one located at Republic Airport in Farmingdale Island and one in Colts Neck, New Jersey.
·         56,000 hot meals and 36,000 liters of water have already been sent for people who may not have access to meals and water.
·         There are 100 people standing by that will take care of requests when an emergency disaster is declared.
·         Upstate New York will have an emergency preparedness center in Oneida County.

Army Corps of Engineers
·         Schumer noted that residents are worried that Long Island’s South Shore inlets, such as Fire Island, could be blocked up. The agency says they are prepared to dredge immediately to open them up. Dredging vessels are readily available in New York and could be taken to Long Island if necessary.
·         Extra debris teams can be sent to the affected areas. Schumer explained that after Hurricane Irene, debris was not immediately removed from roads and power lines were found entangled on debris in the road. These extra crews will help with debris removal.

U.S. Coast Guard
·         The U.S. Coast Guard explained that they are making sure the seas are safe. No ships will be allowed in and out of the New York Harbor after 6pm tonight. Cruise ships must leave the harbor before that time and ships will not be able to dock after that time.
·         The agency will make sure no small boats are on the water. They are continuing to fly helicopters and warning boaters to get back to land.
·         Station Fire Island has been evacuated and the families associated with this station have been evacuated.
·         The agency requested additional helicopters to the area to help with any waterborne tragedies. The agency has been receiving support.

LIPA
·         Schumer noted that one problem is that this storm is expected to affect a large area. LIPA says they have requested additional utility crewmembers from various states, such as: Illinois, Wisconsin and California. Schumer noted that LIPA is doing everything they can to secure out of state crews, however, because this storm is so widespread it means that nearby utility crews may not be able to provide additional workers. There is a greater demand for workers because so many areas will be affected.

Schumer today also called on President Obama and FEMA Administrator Fugate to approve a statewide pre-landfall emergency declaration, which has been submitted by the State of New York, in preparation for Hurricane Sandy. Schumer is asking that the federal government be ready for the State of New York to submit a full emergency disaster declaration request immediately after the storm hits and urged the President and FEMA to approve it without delay. Schumer noted that the declaration would assure local governments that they will have the support of the federal government as they recover from this storm and federal resources should not be delayed. In a letter with Senator Kirsten E. Gillibrand, the Senators noted that New York has mobilized several state agencies, such as the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA, the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation and the New York City Department of Environmental Protection. Schumer and Gillibrand explained that by approving a pre-landfall emergency declaration, New York State’s emergency responders and support agencies would have access to funding to support Category B (emergency protective measures) activities.
A statewide pre-landfall emergency declaration for New York State would allow the state access to FEMA funds to cover emergency protective measures. These are activities undertaken by a community before, during, and following a disaster that are necessary to eliminate or reduce an immediate threat to human life, public health, or safety. Funding can also be applied to activities intended to eliminate or reduce an immediate threat of significant damage to improved public or private property through cost-effective measures. Some examples of activities that may be eligible include warning of risks and hazards, search and rescue operations, and emergency evacuations.

Last year, in preparation for Hurricane Irene, Schumer called on President and FEMA to approve New York’s request for a pre-landfall emergency disaster declaration. Hurricane Irene brought a storm surge of 3-6 feet to the New York area and caused hundreds of millions of dollars in property damage in New York City and Long Island. In New York City, there were approximately 370,000 evacuations and over 700,000 power outages throughout the entire state.
 
ALERT! PDF Print E-mail
Written by Nicole Pressly Wolf   
Saturday, 27 October 2012 14:24
ALERT!
All persons must evacuate Fire Island by 2 PM Sunday, Oct. 28. This evacuation is sent to us by The Suffolk County Fire and Rescue Dept and is in effect Saturday 8AM.
Go to:
suffolkcountyny.gov
or call
631-852-4900
for more information or for a list of shelters near you.
 
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